Books "The Dobsonian Telescope" A Practical Manual for Building Large Aperture Telescopes, by David Kriege and Richard Berry - Hardcover

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2016-08-08T11:25:44

Rated 5 out of 5

Required reading if your building a modern Dobsonian

Impressive and concise book. Although I am still just getting into the book I find it engaging. Based on the book I will likely build a 10 Inch and at some point a larger aperture scope.

DAVID N.

2012-01-01T19:00:00

Rated 5 out of 5

Great Book

Everything you need to know to build your own dob. telescope.

JUDY S.

2011-01-11T19:00:00

Rated 5 out of 5

Would buy this book for friends

Got this after borrowing a copy from friend. Needed a copy for dob building class I'm teaching.

Tex

About Dobsonian Telescope Practical Manual to Build Telescope

FEATURED REVIEWS

Required reading if your building a modern Dobsonian

By DAVID N.

Impressive and concise book. Although I am still just getting into the book I find it engaging. Based on the book I will likely build a 10 Inch and at some point a larger aperture scope.

Great Book

By JUDY S.

Everything you need to know to build your own dob. telescope.

This book tells how you can build a state-of-the-art Dobsonian telescope using readily available materials and supplies. Every step of construction is detailedin photographs and diagrams, and the underlying ideas are carefully explained.

As a result of this three-year collaboration between authors David Kriege and Richard Berry, experienced and well-known telescope makers, you now have the opportunity to build a high-performance telescope from 14 inches to 40 inches aperture based on the thoroughly tested designs described in this book.

The Dobsonian telescope takes its name from the astronomer/philosopher John Dobson, who introduced the concept of inexpensive, large-aperture telescopes to astronomy.

Amateur astronomers at the time were so amazed that a telescope builtfrom simple, inexpensive materials performed so well that they could hardly believe their eyes.

As home-built Dobsonians started showing up at star parties across the nation and people saw what Dobsonians could do, the word spread. In just a few years, the Dobsonian revolution swept the world.

Since those early telescopes, Dobsonians have improved dramatically. An entire generation of amateur telescope makers contributed their best insights and refinements to Dobson's original design.

Today's Dobsonians are larger, lighter,and more precise than ever before. For example, it is possible to build a telescope of 20 inches aperture that is compact enough to transport in a hatchback automobile, yet takes only ten minutes to set up at a remote, dark-skyobserving site.

Deep-sky observers especially appreciate Dobsonian telescopes. With the 20-inch (50 centimeter) aperture that the authors recommend for first-time Dobsonian builders, hundreds of globular clusters, thousands of nebulae, and tens of thousands of galaxies are visible through the eyepiece.

Planetary observers havediscovered that from good observing sites, Dobsonians deliver breathtaking performance on the moon and planets. For the casual stargazer, familiar objects like the Hercules Cluster, the Great Nebula in Orion, the Lagoon Nebula, and thegalaxies of the Virgo Cluster are an entirely new experience.

Key Features

  • Detailed chapters cover range of relevent topics
  • Here are some of the topics covered in this book:
  • Deciding what size telescope will suit your needs
  • Ordering optics for a large Dobsonian
  • Understanding plywood and how to use it properly
  • Making a flotation cell to support the primary mirror

What's in the box:

  • 496 hardbound (6x9inch) pages
  • 179 pictures
  • 88 drawings and 34 tables